A Prize for a Brave

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

A Prize for a Brave Home About Us | Jobs | Contact Old Site | Archives November, 2006 | Younus Special| Peace and the Poor | Congratulatory Remarks | The Nobel Voyage | A Prize for a Brave Man | Muhammad Yunus: A Nobel Tribute | Poverty Traps and Microcredit | Microcredit: Some Contemporary Issues | The Transformative Power of an Idea | Exclusive-Interview with Professor Wangari Maathai | Banker to the Poor EDITORIAL | READERS' FORUM | MARKETING | INTERNATIONAL BUSINESS | CAPITAL MARKET | INTERNATIONAL PRESS | VIEWPOINT | The Nobel Peace Prize is often a prize for courage. When we think of the HEALTH | OPINION | SPORTS | REAL prize we think of Andrei Sakharov in banishment, or Nelson Mandela in his ESTATE South African prison. This year's prize is for a different kind of bravery, the bravery it takes to believe in an idea and to pursue it. Dr. Yunus literally put POLITICS& POWER his money, as the American expression goes, where his mouth is. In 1976, he lent 27 of his own dollars (which must have been a significant part of his The Final Clause professor's salary then) to 42 poor borrowers. Survey & Analyses It probably took even more intellectual courage, and the clarity he is famous ICT for, to take the next step-to draw the right lesson from the fact that they all paid it back. Not the lesson that a more vain man might have drawn, that Making Windows User Friendly they were responding to his unexpected munificence-of course they were-but Qualified ICT Workforce the much more important fact, that even the very poor can take a loan and FOCUS repay it, when it makes sense for them to do so. You can lend to the poor, just like you can lend to any one else, and like everyone else, how easily you Women SMEs in National Development can get them to pay it back depends, in part, on their incentives. The promise Eid Fair 2006 of a future loan does make it easier to collect, especially with the poor who Challenges Facing Women often have no one else who would lend to them. But you also need to do your Entrepreneurs due diligence: make sure that the borrowers are really in it for the long-haul, Opportunities for Women keep an eye on them to make sure that things are not going too far wrong, Entrepreneurs prod them a little when they are late. Like any other banker. Supporting Women Entrepreneurship What makes lending to the poor harder is simply the fact that they borrow so little-a loan of a few thousand Takas is a sizeable loan for them. In part this is due to their own diffidence (what would I do with so much money?), but it is also because lenders worry about how someone would react if he were handed much more money than he has ever had. Would she know how to use Leading Business Schools abroad it responsibly? Or, would it be just too tempting to take and run? subscribes to ET. Do you? The trouble is, even though they borrow very little, much of the work the Subscribe ET lender has to do to be able to lend to them-the so-called transactions costs- finding out where they live, what they do, what business they are in, collecting the money, etc-is not that different from what is involved in making a bigger loan. This is why most lenders do not want to lend to them, and when they do lend, the interest rate they charge tends to be very high. Yunus' great practical insight was that the challenge was to get the transactions costs down. This he made his life's work. This is why Grameen has the weekly meetings with multiple groups (so that a single loan officer can collect from many people at the same time), the group loans (so that all the members have a stake in making sure that the others pay), the attempts to standardize the loans (eliminates the need to make a lot of calculations). All the group activities, like the chanting of the four principles, feed into this as well (though they may also be important for other reasons): By helping to build a Grameen identity, they help to mitigate the usual adversarial relationship between the borrower and the lender. None of this was obvious in 1976. I am not quite of the Dr. Yunus' generation, but I am old enough to remember what most economists were talking about then: It was socialism versus capitalism, the inevitability of the revolution, the miracle of the market, big questions that could be endlessly debated. To walk away from all that and to bury yourself in the nitty-gritty details of how best to lend a few Taka to a few desperately poor women, must have taken enormous courage. When everyone else was busy changing the system, what he was trying to do must have felt utterly trivial at times. It must have taken a lot to keep going. We are grateful that he did. The early efforts, as he describes in his book, did not always go well. Sometimes the group size was too large; sometimes the loan size was wrong. It took a lot of experimentation, and willingness to learn from mistakes to get there. But they got there. The Grameen Bank now charges a maximum of 10 per cent per year, conventionally calculated, compared to interest rates of 50% or more that money-lenders and other private bankers charge the poor. The size of that gap, reflects in part the benefits of even small reductions in transactions cost: One insight from the recent work on the economic theory is that reductions in transactions costs come with what economists call a multiplier-one fall in transactions costs creates another. This is because the initial fall in transactions cost made it possible for Grameen to cut its interest rates; but a lower interest rate makes it less likely that a borrower would want to default, which makes life easier for the lender and reduces transactions costs further, which allows Grameen to cut the interest rate more and so on. This is probably one reason why Grameen can offer loans that are so much cheaper than the market. The other reason is of course, subsidies. Grameen gets a substantial amount of subsidies from donors, which it can pass it on to its borrowers in the form of an interest rate that is below what it costs to deliver the loan. From the point of view of the relation between the borrower and lender, it does not matter whether the cut in the interest rate comes from a lowered transactions cost or a subsidy. Both set off the multiplier, so that the fall in the interest rate can be much bigger than what one would have otherwise anticipated (say based on the size of the subsidy). For this reason, subsidies given to micro-credit organizations can be a very effective way of helping the poor, as long as it does not undermine the professionalism of the organization that is doing the lending. This is why Dr. Yunus has always resisted the almost religious opposition to all subsidies one often comes across in the Microfinance community, especially outside South Asia. The argument that is usually made is that the reliance on subsidies will limit the ability of these organizations to grow, which might have been true had it not been for Dr. Yunus' almost magical ability to get the world to see micro-credit as he sees it. Indeed the danger at this point is that the world may be all too persuaded. Donors love it, and expect it to do miracles; I have even heard how it will help with AIDS in Africa (it might, because anything that brings hope might help, but it hardly seems an open and shut case). Yet we still do not have a scientific evaluation of the impact of micro-credit even on simple outcomes like family earnings-the early attempts to do impact evaluations have had obvious flaws, and together fall well short of a ringing endorsement. Several evaluations that should be much more credible are under way now, but it will be some years before we start sorting out real sense of how what micro- credit can and cannot do. In the meanwhile all we really know is that it has logic in its favor, and the felt experience of many honest and clear-sighted men like Dr. Yunus. Dr. Yunus knows the dangers of inflated expectations. This summer, when we were fortunate enough to spend a couple of hours listening to him in his office in Dhaka, he talked animatedly about the many things that still needed to be done: Bigger loans that allow businesses to grow, ways to help talented children of the poor to go college, something to help those who are too poor even to get micro-credit, and many others. Some of those have been launched already-the rest are on the anvil. They are experiments, he said-the search for better answers continues. A brave man with the will to keep trying: congratulations to him. Abhijit Vinayak Banerjee is Ford Foundation International Professor of Economics, MIT. 2006 -2007 © The Executive Times. All Rights Reserved | Terms and Conditions | .
Recommended publications
  • Xii World Summit of Nobel Peace Laureates
    CHICAGO 23-25 April 2012 XII WORLD SUMMIT OF NOBEL PEACE LAUREATES «Speak up, speak out about your rights and freedoms» The World Summit of Nobel Peace Laureates: “A meeting of hope in the World” We invite all students and PhD students having fluent English and interested in international relations, globalization, geopolitics and international law to take part in XII World Summit of Nobel Peace Laureates. XII WORLD SUMMIT OF NOBEL PEACE LAUREATES is being organized by Permanent Secretariat of the World Summit of Nobel Peace laureates in cooperation with the City of Chicago (USA) and the magazine Time. The Summit will be held at the suggestion of the Gorbachev Foundation, Chicago City Hall, R. Kennedy Foundation and University of Illinois. Chaired by Mikhail Gorbachev and Walter Veltroni, the World Summit of Nobel Peace Laureates is among the most prestigious international appointments in the fields of peace, non-violence, social urgencies, ethnic, religious and cultural conflicts. The World Summit of Nobel Peace Laureates takes place every year since 1999. The last editions of the Summit were attended by 25 Nobel Peace Prize Laureates, 272 international media (including BBC, CNN, NBC, Al Jazeera), 700 delegates, 150 organisations and associations. Among the participants: Mikhail Gorbachev - H.H. The Dalai Lama - Muhammad Yunus - Oscar Arias Sanchez - Lech Walesa – Shimon Peres - Jose Ramos-Horta - David Trimble - John Hume - Kim Dae Yung – Joseph Rotblat, Jody Williams - Betty Williams - Mairead Corrigan Maguire - Philipe Ximenes Belo - Adolfo Perez Esquivel - Rigoberta Menchù Tum - Frederik Willem De Klerk - Unicef - Pugwash Conferences - I.P.P.N.W. - I.P.B.
    [Show full text]
  • Bateman Ids Wp
    See discussions, stats, and author profiles for this publication at: https://www.researchgate.net/publication/272241825 The Rise and Fall of Muhammad Yunus and the Microcredit Model Article in SSRN Electronic Journal · January 2014 DOI: 10.2139/ssrn.2385190 CITATIONS READS 16 2,924 1 author: Milford Bateman Juraj Dobrila University of Pula 93 PUBLICATIONS 641 CITATIONS SEE PROFILE Some of the authors of this publication are also working on these related projects: 'Seduced and betrayed: exposing the contemporary microfinance phenomenon' View project The rise and fall of global microcredit: development, debt and disillusion View project All content following this page was uploaded by Milford Bateman on 27 March 2018. The user has requested enhancement of the downloaded file. #001 JANUARY 2014 THE RISE AND FALL OF MUHAMMAD YUNUS AND THE MICROCREDIT MODEL Milford Bateman Freelance consultant on local economic development and Visiting Professor of Economics at Juraj Dobrila at Pula University, Croatia. Bateman - IDS Working Paper #001 - January 2014 “Microfinance is an idea whose time has come.” Kofi Annan - Former United Nations Secretary-General “The key to ending extreme poverty is to enable the poorest of the poor to get their foot on the ladder of development . the poorest of the poor are stuck beneath it. They lack the minimum amount of capital necessary to get a foothold, and therefore need a boost up to the first rung.” Jeffrey Sachs - American economist and director of the Earth Institute at Columbia University “Give a man a fish, [and] he’ll eat for a day. Give a woman microcredit, [and] she, her husband, her children, and her extended family will eat for a lifetime.” Bono - Lead singer for the Irish band U2 and humanitarian advocate “This is not charity.
    [Show full text]
  • Seventh Nelson Mandela Annual Lecture
    7th Nelson Mandela Annual lecture Johannesburg, 11 July 2009 By Muhammad Yunus I stand in awe, standing in front of the most wonderful person on Earth today. I feel so honoured and privileged to say happy birthday personally to him today. You have inspired us; you don’t know who we, where we grew up, but you have touched our lives. As young people, we looked up to you: you stood tall and made us stand tall; you rejected prejudices and you inspired us to reject prejudices; you rejected hatred and you inspired us to reject hatred. You inspired us to love people, embrace peace; you inspired us to be brave, bold. You inspired us to be defiant. You inspired the whole world. Today, in your 91 st birthday year, it is such an experience to be in your presence on this stage. I feel privileged to be living on this planet while you are with us. Today, this is more than anybody can expect. You lifted people from their insignificance. You gave people honour and dignity, irrespective of their race, colour or religion. You became the symbol of the human spirit. You became the symbol of how best a human being can be. You will remain an inspiration for all time. You had your own struggles; the world watched, we watched on from a distance. We had our own struggles – little ones – but you inspired us, nonetheless. Bangladesh was devastated by massive poverty when it became an independent country. It was devastated by war and bloodshed. On top of it there was massive poverty – and then came the famine in 1974.
    [Show full text]
  • Maximizing Results
    ST/ESA/326 Department of Economic and Social Affairs DEVELOPMENT COOPERATION FOR THE MDGs: MAXIMIZING RESULTS INTERNATIONAL DEVELOPMENT COOPERATION REPORT asdf United Nations New York, 2010 Department of Economic and Social Affairs The Department of Economic and Social Affairs of the United Nations Secretariat is a vital interface between global policies in the economic, social and environmental spheres and national action. The Department works in three main interlinked areas: (i) it compiles, gener- ates and analyses a wide range of economic, social and environmental data and information on which States Members of the United Nations draw to review common problems and take stock of policy options; (ii) it facilitates the negotiations of Member States in many intergovernmental bodies on joint courses of action to address ongoing or emerging global challenges; and (iii) it advises interested Governments on the ways and means of translating policy frameworks developed in United Nations conferences and summits into programmes at the country level and, through technical assistance, helps build national capacities. Note The present report is an independent publication commissioned by UN DESA drawing from the work of the Development Cooperation Forum and additional research and positions of independent authors. Opinions expressed in this report do not necessarily reflect the views of the United Nations. The designations employed and the presentation of the material in this publication do not imply the expression of any opinion whatsoever on the part of the Secretariat of the United Nations concerning the legal status of any country, territory, city or area or of its authorities, or concern- ing the delimitation of its frontiers or boundaries.
    [Show full text]
  • Grameen Bank and Its Sister Organizations
    Global Journal of Management and Business Research: B Economics and Commerce Volume 14 Issue 2 Version 1.0 Year 2014 Type: Double Blind Peer Reviewed International Research Journal Publisher: Global Journals Inc. (USA) Online ISSN: 2249-4588 & Print ISSN: 0975-5853 Grameen Bank and its Sister Organizations- Grameen Chek and Grameen Krishi (Agricultural) Foundation Not Only Providing Credit: They Guide the Landless Families in Bangladesh for their Development By Dr. Kazi Abdur Rouf Noble International University, Canada Abstract- This paper talks about Grameen Bank (GB) micro financing program features, strategies, policies and its two other sister organizations Grameen Chek (GC), involves in manufacturing handloom garments and Grameen Krishi (Agricultural) Foundation (GKF), engages in agricultural activities and irrigation management in Bangladesh. All are social business organizations in Bangladesh. GKF runs its farms ‘no loss basis’. Grameen Bank and Grameen Chek run their programs without receiving external funding; rather these two organizations have operated their programs from their own generated funds. Moreover, Grammen Bank and Grameen Chek are free from external consultants` pressure rather they are developing their programs, policies and implementation strategies by using their in-house staff skills and experience. Keywords: external consultants; external funding; grameen bank; grameen chek; grameeen krishi foundation; internal funding; empowerment; implementation strategies, poverty eradication. GJMBR-B Classification: JEL
    [Show full text]
  • Putting Microfinance to the Test 18-Month Impacts of the Grameen America Program
    Putting Microfinance to the Test 18-Month Impacts of the Grameen America Program September 2020 M. Victoria Quiroz Becerra Kelsey Schaberg Daron Holman Richard Hendra Dissemination of MDRC publications is supported by the following organizations and individuals that help finance MDRC’s public policy outreach and expanding efforts to communicate the results and implications of our work to policymakers, practitioners, and others: The Annie E. Casey Foundation, Arnold Ventures, Charles and Lynn Schusterman Family Foundation, The Edna McConnell Clark Foundation, Ford Foundation, The George Gund Foundation, Daniel and Corinne Goldman, The Harry and Jeanette Weinberg Foundation, Inc., The JPB Foundation, The Joyce Foundation, The Kresge Foundation, and Sandler Foundation. In addition, earnings from the MDRC Endowment help sustain our dissemination efforts. Contributors to the MDRC Endowment include Alcoa Foundation, The Ambrose Monell Foundation, Anheuser- Busch Foundation, Bristol-Myers Squibb Foundation, Charles Stewart Mott Foundation, Ford Foundation, The George Gund Foundation, The Grable Foundation, The Lizabeth and Frank Newman Charitable Foundation, The New York Times Company Foundation, Jan Nicholson, Paul H. O’Neill Charitable Foundation, John S. Reed, Sandler Foundation, and The Stupski Family Fund, as well as other individual contributors. The findings and conclusions in this report do not necessarily represent the official positions or policies of the funders. For information about MDRC and copies of our publications, see our website: www.mdrc.org. Copyright © 2020 by MDRC®. All rights reserved. Putting Microfinance to the Test 18-Month Impacts of the Grameen America Program M. Victoria Quiroz Becerra Kelsey Schaberg Daron Holman Richard Hendra September 2020 OVERVIEW his report summarizes 18-month findings from the evaluation of the Grameen America pro- gram, a microfinance institution that provides loans to low-income women in the United States who are seeking to start or expand a small business.
    [Show full text]
  • RESULTS Applauds Members of Congress and International Leaders Standing in Support of Grameen Bank and Its More Than Eight Million Women Borrowers
    For more information, contact: Blair Hinderliter RESULTS Educational Fund +1 202 783 4800 x126 [email protected] For Immediate Release Wednesday, August 14, 2013 RESULTS Applauds Members of Congress and International Leaders Standing in Support of Grameen Bank and its More than Eight Million Women Borrowers Washington, D.C. — Today, in open letters to Bangladesh Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina, members of Congress and a diverse set of global leaders called on the government of Bangladesh to preserve the independence of Grameen Bank. Grameen Bank provides credit and other critical services to nearly 8.4 million of the poorest women in Bangladesh, creating an opportunity for these women and their families to transform their lives and move out of poverty. The open letters come in advance of the final report of the government-appointed Grameen Bank Commission. The commission’s working paper released in June 2012 included three proposals that would wrest control of the bank from its women borrowers, who currently control 97 percent of Grameen Bank’s shares and hold nine of 13 seats on the bank’s board of directors. The proposals include restructuring the bank so the government would hold 51 percent of shares in the bank and a majority of seats on the bank’s board; breaking up the bank into 19 or more totally separate bank entities with no legal relationship among them; and transforming the bank into a private company. If implemented, these recommendations would undermine the bank's independence and jeopardize the success of the bank and its millions of borrowers and their families.
    [Show full text]
  • Conference on Internal Displacement in Asia - List of Participants
    Conference on Internal Displacement in Asia - List of Participants Bangkok, Thailand, February 22-24, 2000 I. REPRESENTATIVES OF NGOs, ACADEMIC AND RESEARCH INSTITUTIONS, HUMAN RIGHTS COMMISSIONS AND MEDIA IN ASIAN COUNTRIES Afghanistan Marcus J. Dolder, Head of ICRC Delegation, Kabul Ahmad Fahim Hakim, Cooperation for Peace and Unity (CPAU) Bangladesh C.R. Abrar, Coordinator, Refugee and Migratory Movements Research Unit (RMMRU) and Professor, Department of International Relations, University of Dhaka Jamil H. Chowdhury, General Manager, Programme for Research on Poverty Alleviation, Grameen Trust, Grameen Bank Cambodia Latt Ky, Head of Monitoring, ADHOC, Phnom Penh Shaun Williams, Coordinator, Land Study Project, OXFAM, Phnom Penh China Dai Qing, author, Beijing East Timor Father Barreto, Caritas Dili India Subir Bhaumik, Eastern India Correspondent, BBC, Calcutta Mrinal Kanti Chakma, General Secretary, Chittagong Hill Tracts Displaced Peoples' Organisation, Calcutta Omprakash Mishra, Coordinator, Center for Refugee Studies, Jadavpur University, Calcutta Indonesia Maj. Gen. (Ret.) Koesparmono Irsan, Rector, Bhayangkara University and Member National Commission on Human Rights, Jakarta Pusat Agung Ayu, Volunteer Team for Humanity, Jakarta Laos Keedaeng Thammalangsy, Secretary-General, Lao Red Cross Malaysia Hisham Harun Hashim, Chairman, IHL and Legal Affairs Committee, Malaysian Red Crescent Society, Kula Lumpur, Malaysia Myanmar (Burma) Jack Dunford, Director, Burmese Border Consortium, Bangkok, Thailand Aung Htoo, Secretary-General, Burma Lawyers Council, Bangkok, Thailand Azeen Salimi, Assistant Country Manager, Medecins Sans Frontieres - Holland, Yangon Nepal Dev Ratna Dhakwa, Secretary-General, Nepalese Red Cross Society (NRCS), Kathmandu Korea, Republic of (South) Erica Kang, Co-ordinator of International Affairs, Good Friends: Center for Peace, Human Rights and Refugees, North Korea, Seoul, Republic of Korea Pakistan Syed Sikander Mehdi, Chairman, Department of International Relations, University of Karachi, Karachi I.A.
    [Show full text]
  • A Prize Worth Having? Paul Rogers
    OxfordResearchGroup | September 2009 International Security Monthly Briefing – September 2009 A Prize Worth Having? Paul Rogers When the Nobel Peace Prize was announced there was surprise if not astonishment in many circles. This year’s prize had been considered to be very open, but several potential recipients had been identified, including Pieda Cordoba of Colombia, Prince Ghazi bin Muhammad of Jordan and Dr Sima Sanar of Afghanistan. These and others were people involved in long-term human rights activism or specific campaigns on issues such as inter-faith dialogue. The awarding of the prize to President Barack Obama was far from being the first time that it had gone to a head of state or other leading political figure, but on most previous occasions it had been for defined achievements over some years. In the case of President Obama, the award was “for his extraordinary efforts to strengthen international diplomacy and cooperation between peoples”, but critics pointed to the very short space of time involved, with the nominating process actually having been completed within days of his taking office last January. A consequence of the decision was very strong opposition from the political right in the United States, sometimes bordering on apoplexy and frequently seeing it as interference in domestic policies, especially at a time of intensive controversy over health care reform. There were also criticisms from progressive circles, mainly that the prize committee should not have made the award to a politician who, whatever the changes he was seeking, was still involved in a war in Iraq, and was considering an escalation in Afghanistan and heavier involvement in counter-insurgency in Pakistan.
    [Show full text]
  • A Letter to the Honorable Sheikh Hasina, Prime Minister of Bangladesh, on Grameen Bank
    A Letter to the Honorable Sheikh Hasina, Prime Minister of Bangladesh, on Grameen Bank Honorable Prime Minister Hasina, We are allies and friends of Bangladesh—men nutritionally rich food to impoverished com- would disenfranchise nearly 5 million borrow- and women, public servants and businesspeople, and munities; building health clinics to offer afford- er-shareholders in Grameen Bank, dismiss the bor- citizens whose countries have all known the sting of able medical care; and introducing solar power rowers who sit on the bank’s board of directors, and poverty. We write to commend your leadership in to rural areas without electricity. replace them with government officials. They would the fight to end poverty in your country, and to urge also result in the government seizing portions of the you to reject the findings of a recent commission — Their founder, Muhammad Yunus, has been Grameen businesses. that would jeopardize the role that Grameen Bank a tireless advocate for Bangladesh’s success in These are recommendations which you and and the Grameen family of businesses have played improving the lives of its people. your finance ministry have the right to reject. We in that fight. believe that implementing them could be disas- The Grameen family of businesses has deliv- Both Bangladesh and the international com- trous. They would lead Bangladesh to violate its ered a profound and lasting benefit to the people of munity have a compelling interest in the safety and obligations under bilateral investment treaties, and Bangladesh: soundness of these institutions. We commend you to compromise the independence that has protect- for ensuring that Grameen Bank and the Grameen ed Grameen Bank from political turmoil over the — Grameen Bank has allowed millions to lift businesses are operating in the interests of the peo- last three decades.
    [Show full text]
  • World Humanitarian Summit 2017 Reporting Recognising the Change
    World Humanitarian Summit 2017 Reporting Recognising the change that could be brought to the lives of children around the world if visionaries from various fields worked together and to honour the commitments made at World Humanitarian Summit, Nobel Peace Laureate, Kailash Satyarthi ( founder of Kailash Satyarthi Children’s Foundation and Global March Against Child Labour) proposed bringing together Nobel Laureates and world leaders to interact with and work for the right of every child to have a free, safe and educated childhood. To bring this vision to fruition, the Laureates and Leaders for Children platform was launched in 2016. The Laureates and Leaders for Children Summit 2016, was held in New Delhi, India with the objective of building a strong moral platform for a child-friendly world by globalising compassion for ending trafficking especially its worst forms like sexual exploitation and slavery everywhere. The Summit brought together the collective leadership of 24 Laureates and Leaders, youth and over 150 eminent personalities from various walks of life – academia, business, civil society, sports, arts and culture. The Summit called the world to urgent action to allow children to remain children, all over the world. The two-day Summit was inaugurated by the Hon’ble President of India, Mr. Pranab Mukherjee. At the Summit, Nobel Laureates and world leaders met for a common and an urgent goal to unite the world through compassion for our children.Over 300 delegates from various walks of life participated in the Summit – academia, business, human rights, civil society and media. At the end of the Summit, a declaration was shared detailing the joint ‘Will for Children’ from all the eminent participants.
    [Show full text]
  • The Role of the Private Sector in Fragile And
    WORLD DEVELOPMENT REPORT 2011 Public Disclosure Authorized BACKGROUND PAPER THE ROLE OF THE PRIVATE SECTOR IN FRAGILE AND Public Disclosure Authorized CONFLICT-AFFECTED STATES Mary Porter Peschka Regional Head Advisory Services in Latin America and the Caribbean IFC With contributions from: James J. Emery Public Disclosure Authorized Keith Martin July 2010 (updated April 2011) The findings, interpretations, and conclusions expressed in this paper are entirely those of the Public Disclosure Authorized authors. They do not necessarily represent the views of the World Development Report 2011 team, the World Bank and its affiliated organizations, or those of the Executive Directors of the World Bank or the governments they represent. Table of Contents I. Introduction II. The Private Sector during Conflict III. The Private Sector Role in Peace-building, Relief and Reconstruction IV. Short Term Interventions to Enhance the Private Sector’s Impact V. Reforming the Business Environment in Fragile and Conflict-affected States VI. International Risk-sharing Mechanisms for the Private Sector in Fragile and Conflict- affected States VII. Going Forward: Reinforcing the Private Sector Contribution to Securing Development VIII. Annexes a. Natural Resource Investments and Conflict b. Remittances c. Telecommunications d. Financial Services Development in Fragile Situations e. Development and Foreign Investment: The Case of Mozambique and Mozal I. Introduction* This paper explores how the private sector can positively contribute to peace-building and conflict prevention, and how that positive private sector role can be supported and enhanced. The starting premise recognizes that the private sector exists in all conflict situations and has the potential to both exacerbate and ameliorate conflict, the outcome of which can be greatly affected by appropriate support from external partners.
    [Show full text]